Hi Marco, On 21.04.2021 13:03, Marco Elver wrote: > On Wed, 21 Apr 2021 at 12:57, Marek Szyprowski <m.szyprowski@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 21.04.2021 11:35, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >>> On 21.04.2021 10:11, Marco Elver wrote: >>>> On Wed, 21 Apr 2021 at 09:35, Marek Szyprowski >>>> <m.szyprowski@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> On 21.04.2021 08:21, Marek Szyprowski wrote: >>>>>> On 21.04.2021 00:42, Marco Elver wrote: >>>>>>> On Tue, 20 Apr 2021 at 23:26, Marek Szyprowski >>>>>>> <m.szyprowski@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>>>>> On 08.04.2021 12:36, Marco Elver wrote: >>>>>>>>> Introduces the TRAP_PERF si_code, and associated siginfo_t field >>>>>>>>> si_perf. These will be used by the perf event subsystem to send >>>>>>>>> signals >>>>>>>>> (if requested) to the task where an event occurred. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Acked-by: Geert Uytterhoeven <geert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> # m68k >>>>>>>>> Acked-by: Arnd Bergmann <arnd@xxxxxxxx> # asm-generic >>>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Marco Elver <elver@xxxxxxxxxx> >>>>>>>> This patch landed in linux-next as commit fb6cc127e0b6 ("signal: >>>>>>>> Introduce TRAP_PERF si_code and si_perf to siginfo"). It causes >>>>>>>> regression on my test systems (arm 32bit and 64bit). Most systems >>>>>>>> fails >>>>>>>> to boot in the given time frame. I've observed that there is a >>>>>>>> timeout >>>>>>>> waiting for udev to populate /dev and then also during the network >>>>>>>> interfaces configuration. Reverting this commit, together with >>>>>>>> 97ba62b27867 ("perf: Add support for SIGTRAP on perf events") to >>>>>>>> let it >>>>>>>> compile, on top of next-20210420 fixes the issue. >>>>>>> Thanks, this is weird for sure and nothing in particular stands out. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> I have questions: >>>>>>> -- Can you please share your config? >>>>>> This happens with standard multi_v7_defconfig (arm) or just defconfig >>>>>> for arm64. >>>>>> >>>>>>> -- Also, can you share how you run this? Can it be reproduced in >>>>>>> qemu? >>>>>> Nothing special. I just boot my test systems and see that they are >>>>>> waiting lots of time during the udev populating /dev and network >>>>>> interfaces configuration. I didn't try with qemu yet. >>>>>>> -- How did you derive this patch to be at fault? Why not just >>>>>>> 97ba62b27867, given you also need to revert it? >>>>>> Well, I've just run my boot tests with automated 'git bisect' and that >>>>>> was its result. It was a bit late in the evening, so I didn't analyze >>>>>> it further, I've just posted a report about the issue I've found. It >>>>>> looks that bisecting pointed to a wrong commit somehow. >>>>>>> If you are unsure which patch exactly it is, can you try just >>>>>>> reverting 97ba62b27867 and see what happens? >>>>>> Indeed, this is a real faulty commit. Initially I've decided to revert >>>>>> it to let kernel compile (it uses some symbols introduced by this >>>>>> commit). Reverting only it on top of linux-next 20210420 also fixes >>>>>> the issue. I'm sorry for the noise in this thread. I hope we will find >>>>>> what really causes the issue. >>>>> This was a premature conclusion. It looks that during the test I've did >>>>> while writing that reply, the modules were not deployed properly and a >>>>> test board (RPi4) booted without modules. In that case the board booted >>>>> fine and there was no udev timeout. After deploying kernel modules, the >>>>> udev timeout is back. >>>> I'm confused now. Can you confirm that the problem is due to your >>>> kernel modules, or do you think it's still due to 97ba62b27867? Or >>>> fb6cc127e0b6 (this patch)? >>> I don't use any custom kernel modules. I just deploy all modules that >>> are being built from the given kernel defconfig (arm >>> multi_v7_defconfig or arm64 default) and they are automatically loaded >>> during the boot by udev. I've checked again and bisect was right. The >>> kernel built from fb6cc127e0b6 suffers from the described issue, while >>> the one build from the previous commit (2e498d0a74e5) works fine. >> I've managed to reproduce this issue with qemu. I've compiled the kernel >> for arm 32bit with multi_v7_defconfig and used some older Debian rootfs >> image. The log and qemu parameters are here: >> https://protect2.fireeye.com/v1/url?k=7cfc23a2-23671aa9-7cfda8ed-002590f5b904-dab7e2ec39dae1f9&q=1&e=36a5ed13-6ad5-430c-8f44-e95c4f0af5c3&u=https%3A%2F%2Fpaste.debian.net%2F1194526%2F >> >> Check the timestamp for the 'EXT4-fs (vda): re-mounted' message and >> 'done (timeout)' status for the 'Waiting for /dev to be fully populated' >> message. This happens only when kernel modules build from the >> multi_v7_defconfig are deployed on the rootfs. > Still hard to say what is going on and what is at fault. But being > able to repro this in qemu helps debug quicker -- would you also be > able to share the precise rootfs.img, i.e. upload it somewhere I can > fetch it? And just to be sure, please also share your .config, as it > might have compiler-version dependent configuration that might help > repro (unlikely, but you never know). I've managed to reproduce this issue with a public Raspberry Pi OS Lite rootfs image, even without deploying kernel modules: https://downloads.raspberrypi.org/raspios_lite_armhf/images/raspios_lite_armhf-2021-03-25/2021-03-04-raspios-buster-armhf-lite.zip # qemu-system-arm -M virt -smp 2 -m 512 -kernel zImage -append "earlycon console=ttyAMA0 root=/dev/vda2 rw rootwait" -serial stdio -display none -monitor null -device virtio-blk-device,drive=virtio-blk -drive file=/tmp/2021-03-04-raspios-buster-armhf-lite.img,id=virtio-blk,if=none,format=raw -netdev user,id=user -device virtio-net-device,netdev=user The above one doesn't boot if zImage z compiled from commit fb6cc127e0b6 and boots if compiled from 2e498d0a74e5. In both cases I've used default arm/multi_v7_defconfig and gcc-linaro-6.4.1-2017.11-x86_64_arm-linux-gnueabi toolchain. Best regards -- Marek Szyprowski, PhD Samsung R&D Institute Poland